East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.

It has been shown in literature that East Asians are more inclined to process context information than individuals in Western cultures. Using a context memory task that requires studying object images in social contexts (i.e., rating objects in an imagined social or experiential scenario), our recen...

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Main Authors: Lixia Yang, Juan Li, Andrea Wilkinson, Julia Spaniol, Lynn Hasher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6245740?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-4b93b3415c534044888c367e634f29732020-11-25T01:57:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011311e020751510.1371/journal.pone.0207515East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.Lixia YangJuan LiAndrea WilkinsonJulia SpaniolLynn HasherIt has been shown in literature that East Asians are more inclined to process context information than individuals in Western cultures. Using a context memory task that requires studying object images in social contexts (i.e., rating objects in an imagined social or experiential scenario), our recent study revealed an age-invariant advantage for Chinese young and older participants compared to their Canadian counterparts in memory for encoding contexts. To examine whether this cultural difference also occurred during encoding, this follow-up report analyzed encoding performance and its relationship to subsequent memory based on the same data from the same task of the same sample. The results revealed that at encoding, Chinese participants provided higher ratings of objects, took longer to rate, and reported more vivid imagery of encoding contexts relative to their Canadian counterparts. Furthermore, only Chinese participants rated objects with recognized context at retrieval higher and slower relative to those with misrecognized context. For Chinese participants, primarily older adults, slower ratings were only related to better context memory but not item memory. Importantly, Chinese participants' context memory advantage disappeared after controlling for encoding differences. Taken together, these results suggest that Chinese participants' memory advantage for social contexts may have its origin in the construction of elaborative and meaningful object-context associations at encoding.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6245740?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lixia Yang
Juan Li
Andrea Wilkinson
Julia Spaniol
Lynn Hasher
spellingShingle Lixia Yang
Juan Li
Andrea Wilkinson
Julia Spaniol
Lynn Hasher
East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lixia Yang
Juan Li
Andrea Wilkinson
Julia Spaniol
Lynn Hasher
author_sort Lixia Yang
title East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
title_short East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
title_full East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
title_fullStr East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
title_full_unstemmed East-West cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
title_sort east-west cultural differences in encoding objects in imagined social contexts.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description It has been shown in literature that East Asians are more inclined to process context information than individuals in Western cultures. Using a context memory task that requires studying object images in social contexts (i.e., rating objects in an imagined social or experiential scenario), our recent study revealed an age-invariant advantage for Chinese young and older participants compared to their Canadian counterparts in memory for encoding contexts. To examine whether this cultural difference also occurred during encoding, this follow-up report analyzed encoding performance and its relationship to subsequent memory based on the same data from the same task of the same sample. The results revealed that at encoding, Chinese participants provided higher ratings of objects, took longer to rate, and reported more vivid imagery of encoding contexts relative to their Canadian counterparts. Furthermore, only Chinese participants rated objects with recognized context at retrieval higher and slower relative to those with misrecognized context. For Chinese participants, primarily older adults, slower ratings were only related to better context memory but not item memory. Importantly, Chinese participants' context memory advantage disappeared after controlling for encoding differences. Taken together, these results suggest that Chinese participants' memory advantage for social contexts may have its origin in the construction of elaborative and meaningful object-context associations at encoding.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6245740?pdf=render
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AT andreawilkinson eastwestculturaldifferencesinencodingobjectsinimaginedsocialcontexts
AT juliaspaniol eastwestculturaldifferencesinencodingobjectsinimaginedsocialcontexts
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